The number of employees at a plant continually fluctuates. One month started at 568. Then 102 employees were hired, and the next 57 employees were displaced. If the plant then plans to add 10% more employees, how many will it have?

1.10(568+102-57) = ?

523

To find out how many employees the plant will have after the changes, we need to follow a step-by-step approach.

1. Start with the initial number of employees at the plant, which is 568.

2. 102 employees were hired, so we need to add this number to the initial number of employees: 568 + 102 = 670.

3. After the 102 employees were hired, another 57 employees were displaced. To find the new total, we need to subtract 57 from the previous total: 670 - 57 = 613.

4. The plant plans to add 10% more employees. To calculate this, we need to find 10% of the current number of employees and then add it to the current total.

To find 10% of a value, you can multiply the value by 0.1 (10% = 0.1).

10% of 613 = 0.1 * 613 = 61.3 (rounded to the nearest whole number).

To add the 10% increase, we add the rounded value to the current total: 613 + 61 = 674.

Therefore, the plant will have 674 employees after the changes.